Tiny Core Linux 4.2 is a complete operating system in 64MB or less

Once upon a time operating systems shipped on a stack of 1.4MP floppy disks. These days most come on DVDs because the installer files can’t fit on 640MB CDs. And then there’s Tiny Core Linux.

Tiny Core is a light-weight Linux distribution focused on providing a fast, small, but usable operating system. TinyCore uses just 12MB of disk space and can be booted from a USB flash drive or a CD.

Despite its small size, Tiny Core still includes a graphics user interface, a few apps, and an app manager that allows you download software including Firefox, AbiWord, or even GIMP and LibreOffice (if you decide you don’t really care about file size that much anyway).

If you don’t need the GUI, there’s a command-line only version that’s just 8MB.

With the launch of Tiny Core 4.2 earlier this month the developers also released a 64MB CorePlus version which includes a choice of window managers and other extensions that make it possible to customize the user experience and add features.

Tiny Core isn’t the prettiest Linux-based operating system around; it’s not necessarily the easiest to configure; and it isn’t designed to run some of the software you’d find in more powerful Linux distributions. But it’s still impressive just how much the Tiny Core team can pack into 64MB or less.

If you have a very old computer or a very small USB flash drive, you can probably still use Tiny Core Linux. And if you have a very slow internet connection, you can probably download and install Tiny Core reasonably quickly.

Nice find Brad! I’m downloading it now… Takes over 10 minutes to DL 64mbp. Guess they should have created a torrent link for it.

Anonymous

Trying it now. Will boot from USB. I hate that my laptops bios doesnt have boot from SD option.

http://identi.ca/ddevine Daniel Devine

Tiny Core for ARM would be pretty interesting.

Anonymous

tell me please how to make fonts render half-decent on that system..

Anonymous

The way I handled this back when I was making a tiny GUI-based Linux distribution (20 megs with Dillo and 30 megs with Firefox) was to use bitmap conversions of Microsoft’s Verdana font–this is legal in the US because bitmap fonts can not be copyrighted here. It looked almost as good as Windows XP without Clear type rendering and was very readable.